books

The Cloud Versus Grand Unification Theory (ECW Press 2017)

Consciousness and nostalgia in the Swipe Right age.

The Cloud Versus Grand Unification Theory attempts to find poetry, or what Gwendolyn MacEwen once called “a single symmetry”, amid the chaos of 21st century life. A powerful catalogue of loss and human connection, it considers not only how our identities are formed by places and experiences rooted in childhood, but also by digital newsfeeds, Youtube and the “gospel of Spotify” which increasingly shape our modern lives. These poems trace in intimate detail the various ways the speaker is forced to confront such diverse topics as quantum physics, video arcades, mental illness, climate change, road rage, alcoholism, endangered species, and even a gigantic Noah’s Ark replica.

Banks is a poet known for packing his lines with thought and feeling, but in this new book even he concedes, “It is hard to keep the world together through paradox, by thinking and feeling alone. Ask questions to the darkness, and a voice will speak back.”

It’s that voice that every poem in his fourth collection is chasing. Building on the generous work of John Koethe, Larry Levis and Ada Limon, Banks’s wildly expansive, often lyric, deeply accessible poems are brilliant meditations on what it means to be human in a brave new world of “cloud” computing and smart phones.

Winter Cranes (ECW Press, 2011)

Inspired by a group of herons resting near the author’s home towards the end of a long and difficult winter, this collection of poems employs the crane—the symbol of longevity, immortality, and good fortune in Asian folklore—as its dominant image. Questions such as How do we make sense of our lives? and What is the role of the imagination, art, and place in shaping our vision of the self and teaching us how to be human? are explored using unabashed lyricism and a wry, philosophical style.Winter Cranes demonstrates Chris Banks’s ability to be an uncompromising poet, determined to understand his experience of a world constantly changing around him.

The Cold Panes of Surfaces (Junction Books, 2006)

The Cold Panes of Surfaces is the moving second collection of poems from award-winning author Chris Banks.

Rooted in the pastoral tradition of Wordsworth, Frost and Wallace Stevens, The Cold Panes of Surfacesdescribes the Southern Ontario landscape of trains, lakes, moose and pine with unflinchingly sharp image and metaphor. In so doing, he brings to it a distinctly modern edge, meditating on “the rent we are paying to the planet for our waning lives.” Here, beetles become “child kamikazes… a wallpaper of yellow-winged flames” and the planet is a “Museum of Natural Beauty.”

Banks takes imaginative leaps into the worlds of a magician’s assistant, a fifteenth-century Japanese poet, and the Muse. Most of all, these poems eloquently describe childhood, loss in all its forms, the vagaries of relationships, and being “a sullen young man / caught in the world’s fist.”

The Cold Panes of Surfaces is a remarkable collection, and a fitting follow-up to Banks’ award-winning first book Bonfires.

Bonfires (Junction Books, 2003)

Bringing Canadian poetry back to the achingly honest tradition of John Newlove and Bronwen Wallace, Chris Banks eschews linguistic showmanship, sketching in deft strokes the foreignness of things familiar.

Framed within the rural landscape of southwestern Ontario and Al Purdy’s “country north of Belleville,” Banks turns his pen to modern life and the small domestic urgencies that arise from it. This is a landscape we are all familiar with – grocery lines, “chemical-green lawns,” piles of gas bills and tax receipts, endless whirring highways and “a nacreous moon shining/ over condominiums.” A pointed and unrequited longing underpins Bonfires, but rather than toil in the darkness of his daily observations, Banks presses on to show us the essential centre where “everything disassembles itself / into some new clarity here.”